CNET ranks top rural internet providers for 2025

CNET has named T-Mobile Home Internet as the best overall choice for rural households in 2025, citing its wide availability and affordable plans starting at $50 a month. The review highlights challenges in rural connectivity, where 63% of Americans report paying higher prices for unreliable service, and recommends alternatives like Ziply Fiber and Starlink for areas lacking wired options.

Accessing reliable internet remains a significant challenge in rural America due to low population density and limited infrastructure, leaving many residents short of the FCC's broadband benchmark of 100Mbps download and 20Mbps upload speeds. According to a CNET survey, 63% of Americans have noticed paying more for subpar connectivity.

T-Mobile Home Internet tops CNET's list with coverage for over 60% of US households, offering speeds from 133 to 415Mbps, unlimited data, free equipment, and no contracts. Plans start at $50 monthly, with perks like mobile bundle discounts enhancing its value, though speeds may vary and home users are deprioritized over mobile traffic.

For wired alternatives, CenturyLink provides DSL in 16 states with speeds of 30 to 100Mbps for $55 a month, including unlimited data but potential variability below broadband levels. Kinetic by Windstream serves 18 states with fast DSL up to FCC standards and fiber options reaching 1,000Mbps where available, starting at similar prices without data caps.

Rise Broadband offers fixed wireless in 16 states, with speeds up to 250Mbps and unlimited data options for around $50, outperforming satellite in latency for gaming. Mediacom's cable service covers 22 states, starting at $15 for low-income programs and up to 1,000Mbps for $65, though with data caps on lower tiers.

Ziply Fiber excels in the Northwest with symmetrical speeds up to 50Gbps in select rural areas, entry plans at $30 for 300Mbps and no contracts. For remote spots, Starlink provides satellite internet as a reliable fallback.

CNET's selections prioritize availability, performance, pricing, and customer satisfaction, noting rural ISPs often cost more per Mbps than urban ones. Fiber like Ziply offers the fastest rural speeds, while 5G from T-Mobile shows promise for expansion.

Related Articles

CNET has updated its recommendations for family phone plans, focusing on options from T-Mobile, AT&T, and Verizon that balance cost, data, and perks for groups of three or more. Key picks include T-Mobile's Essentials for value and Verizon's Unlimited Welcome for flexibility. Recent changes, such as T-Mobile's new plans and Verizon's price cuts, influence these choices.

Reported by AI

Building on its 2025 roundup of top cellphone plans, CNET has updated its annual guide with recommendations for the best prepaid phone plans in 2026. It emphasizes affordable, flexible options on AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile networks, from free plans to $60 monthly tiers, incorporating new additions, simplified offerings, and network tweaks.

The Federal Communications Commission has approved Charter Communications' $34.5 billion purchase of Cox Communications, announced in May 2025. The merger will combine Charter's 31 million customers with Cox's 6.5 million, creating the largest internet provider in the US. Officials highlight potential benefits like faster broadband and job onshoring, though critics warn of possible price increases.

Reported by AI

AT&T will increase prices by up to $20 per month on its retired unlimited wireless plans starting in April 2026. The change affects accounts with plans activated before July 24, 2025, but includes an extra 20GB of hotspot data. This follows the recent launch of new 2.0 unlimited plans.

The Communications Authority of Kenya has invited public feedback on proposed guidelines to improve the safety and reliability of internet infrastructure. The rules address growing public complaints about poorly installed fiber cables hanging on poles, walls, and streets. Comments are due by May 20.

Reported by AI

Following the FCC's March 23 announcement banning sales of new Wi-Fi routers with major foreign manufacturing due to security risks, companies like TP-Link and Netgear have responded with production shift plans, while experts cite threats like Salt Typhoon and warn of update cutoffs after March 1, 2027. No exemptions granted yet; Starlink routers appear unaffected.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline